How To Sell 1 Photo For $35,000+ Online

Want to make money as a travel photographer? Wondering how to sell your photos, maybe to advertising agencies and huge multinational clients?

Every photographer wanting to make some money from their camera ought to take an introductory class to economics, not least to really hammer in the rule of supply and demand.

Selling stock photographs used to be a profitable income stream for many photographers. As their portfolio grew, they were able to transition towards a comfortable retirement.

Not so now. Affordable digital cameras and the internet combined to create a huge, readily available supply of quality stock photographs of pretty much everything.

Wastwater, England – Been there, photographed it, sold the pictures.

Simultaneously, the same magazines and press that would buy these stock photos were swiftly being killed off by digital media – so with less money, budgets dropped.

This was, and is, a huge challenge to those photographers unable or unwilling to change.

‘In the long history of humankind (and animal kind, too) those who learned to collaborate and improvise most effectively have prevailed.‘ – Darwin

Build Your Personal Photography Brand

However, let’s look more closely at the business of selling photographs. If Andreas Gursky’s success will prove anything (he sold one photograph for $4.3 million), it is that brand and personal vision matters.

Brand is nothing new. Weston, White, Wall; they’re all incredible photographers, but just like so many famous painters, the value of their work is found as much in the market-value of the work as pure aesthetics.

The Future of Professional Photography

But back to making money right now as the title said you’d learn. Stock photography is out for most people – it simply takes far too long to upload and tag all the images for too little reward.

Travel photography is increasingly becoming commoditised too. Why fly a photographer half-way around the world to take a picture of the Taj Mahal at sunset when an Indian student living nearby already has an amazing photo for sale online?

Product and automotive photography is also going through troubled times. 3D models are now photo-realistic to the point that it’s almost impossible to tell photographs from computer renderings.

The secret to selling your photos online

It’s taken me 10+ years of photographic obsession and a degree in Literature, Psychology and Philosophy to develop a personal viewpoint, and I teach Holistic Photography worldwide to private clients.

I’ve grown to love Monte Carlo’s contrasts

The majority are great photographers anyway, and I assume that they’re not too fussed about getting lots of ‘likes’ on photo-sharing sites (the secret is just tediously liking other people’s photos for an hour).

Therefore, I recommend that they sell their photographs via a relatively new photography website called ImageBrief, which sells direct to top ad agencies and other buyers.

This seems to work because the buyers either don’t have the time to search through thousands of stock photographs, need something highly specific (and often time-based), and moreover, value exclusivity.

It works for my alumni because they get to pick and choose briefs that interest them – many just do photography for fun, but use the very best gear and travel a lot. They use the briefs like mini-challenges, with more than a virtual pat on the back if the images they submit are chosen.

Make money with photography

Anyway, ImageBrief finally have a referrals program so I’m sharing this with everyone now (all my private clients already sign up). Apparently if you sell a photo, they give me a bit of cash; a win-win situation! http://www.imagebrief.com/r/1jVJVE

To test it, I’ve entered a few briefs, and quickly sold this picture for $500;

it’s not about the building per se; it’s about the colour/ mood

So it works. Some of the briefs are very specific but it’s surprising how many anyone could win. For example;

$10-15,000 – ‘Sun flare caught in ‘everyday moments’

$35,000 – ‘Mature Natural People Lifestyle’

$10-20,000 – ‘Babies 3-8 months old sleeping on back’

$10,000 – ‘Portraits – candid, everyday people, warm, friendly’

$1,000 – ’20-something girls hanging out laughing and happy’

It’s free to join and submit images. Precisely because the site works, many of the professional photographers using it (the top 10 photographers made $74,952 the last month I checked) haven’t shared it much so there’s still not a lot of competition.

Lots of the briefs are photos that most people don’t happen to have on their hard drives – $500 – ‘Young person taking a picture of themselves making a dog beard’. You can discover how to sell photos for lots of money by researching the briefs and finding out what clients are looking for.

I don’t think this can last either – supply will drive prices down. But for now, you can learn how to make money from photography, selling photos that clients really want – and any photographer who can make the grade can win.

Before, I’ve dabbled with exhibitions, but messing about with framing, the small, speculative return on investment and the general fuss put me off. One gallery owner wanted $4,000 just to take my photos to an international art show!

An artist in the landscape

Consider the rule of supply and demand. If the barriers to entry are low, then you can bet supply will be high – lots of people with cameras competing and driving prices down. If you need to invest a lot of time or money to be able to take certain photos (deep sea diving photography might be one example), then you’ll be better rewarded. Imagebrief is free to join, and while they do actually check your photography when you join to make sure you’re good at what you do, it won’t be long until they have huge amounts of photographers and prices will surely drop. It’s just a matter of evolving to keep up with a rapidly changing market if you want to make money with your photography. If you know the next big thing, post it in the comments below!